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Trump Administration Aims to Relax Limits on Toxic Wastewater From Coal-Fired Power Plants

The agency says the change would give permit writers more flexibility and could cut annual electricity generation costs by up to $1.1 billion.

  • On Thursday, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency announced a proposal to overhaul wastewater limits for steam electric power plants, aiming to stabilize the national power grid and cut energy bills.
  • EPA Administrator Lee Zeldin argued that the 2024 Biden administration rule "jeopardized many affordable and reliable baseload power plants" while imposing requirements Scott Corwin, President of the American Public Power Association, called "administratively unworkable."
  • The EPA plans to "rescind certain one-size-fits-all limits" in favor of case-by-case discharge standards, a revision officials estimate could shave up to $1.1 billion off annual electricity generation costs.
  • Environmental group Earthjustice slammed the proposal as a public health danger, with attorney Thom Cmar warning it would exempt contaminated groundwater from treatment and threaten drinking water sources.
  • The EPA is now entering a 30-day public comment period before finalizing the rule, which seeks to bolster the coal fleet amid surging electricity demand from artificial intelligence data centers.
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Trump administration aims to roll back limits on toxic wastewater from coal-fired power plants

The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency wants to relax limits that require coal-fired power plants to prevent the release of toxic heavy metals into streams and rivers.

·United States
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The Free Press (Tampa) broke the news in Tampa, United States on Thursday, May 14, 2026.
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